Scrapping Trident And Transitioning To A Nuclear-Free World
By Rajesh Makwana
As the illicit trade in nuclear weapons escalates alongside
the risk of geopolitical conflict, it’s high time governments decisively
prioritised nuclear disarmament – and that means scrapping Trident, the UK’s
inordinately expensive nuclear deterrent, which would also facilitate the
redistribution of scarce public resources to fund essential services.
As geopolitical tensions escalate in the Middle East and the
world teeters on the brink of a new Cold War, it’s clear that the only way to
eliminate the threat of nuclear warfare is for governments to fulfil their
long-held commitment to the “general and complete disarmament” of nuclear
weapons – permanently. A bold and essential step towards this crucial goal is
to decommission Trident, the UK’s ineffective, unusable and costly nuclear
deterrent submarines. Renewing Trident would not only undermine international
disarmament efforts for years to come, it will reinforce the hazardous belief
that maintaining a functional nuclear arsenal is essential for any nation
seeking to wield power on the world stage.
Needless to say, modern nuclear bombs are many times more
destructive than those dropped on Japan at the end of the Second World War, and
would result in a host of immeasurably devastating impacts on the natural world
and human life if they were deployed today. The extent to which nuclear weapons
currently proliferate the globe is therefore alarming and underscores the need
for radical action on this critical issue. According to the Stockholm
International Peace Research Institute, nine countries (the United States,
Russia, the United Kingdom, France, China, India, Pakistan, Israel and North
Korea) possess a total of 16,000 nuclear weapons, of which 4,300 are deployed
with operational forces and 1,800 are “kept in a state of high operational
alert” – which means they can be launched within a 5 to 15-minute timeframe if
necessary.
However, these figures don’t tell the full story. According
to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons, five other European
nations host US nuclear weapons on their territory as part of a NATO agreement,
and 23 additional countries rely on US nuclear capabilities for their national
security. Furthermore, the spread of nuclear technology and the illicit trade
in nuclear weapons means that any state can potentially develop or purchase
nuclear-grade weapons, which confirms the widely held view that a number of
other nations unofficially harbour nuclear warheads, and many more could do so
in the years ahead.
Fading visions of nuclear disarmament
The abundance of nuclear weapons and related technology
highlights the weakness of the international Non-Proliferation Treaty, which
has only made limited progress on nuclear disarmament since its inception in
1968 despite near universal membership. With high levels of nuclear stockpiles
still in existence, there is also a very real risk of unintended but deadly
consequences. According to a report by The Royal Institute of International
Affairs, there have been 13 instances of nuclear bombs being ‘accidently’
deployed since 1962 by Russia, the US and other countries – mainly due to
technical malfunctions or breakdowns in communication. As international
disarmament efforts diminish, such risks are set to increase alongside the
growing likelihood of targeted terrorist attacks on existing nuclear
facilities.
It’s clear that Trident, like every other nuclear weapons
system, is a relic of a bygone age that simply cannot guarantee the safety of
any nation at a time when global terrorism and climate change pose a far more
urgent threat to national security than other states with nuclear weapons. As
the columnist Simon Jenkins puts it, “All declared threats to Britain tend to
come either from powers with no conceivable designs on conquering Britain or
from forces immune to deterrence.” Indeed, most countries of the world
(including 25 NATO states) don’t maintain their own nuclear stockpiles, and yet
they have been just as successful in ‘deterring’ nuclear war as the UK.
Moreover, the International Court of Justice has ruled that
the threat or use of nuclear weapons would be contrary to the rules of
international law, which means that their use would be illegal in virtually any
situation. Given that it is close to unimaginable that a so-called world leader
would ever deploy nuclear weapons (on ethical and legal grounds, as well as for
fear of retaliatory consequences) their value as an effective deterrent is
unjustifiable and deeply flawed. The farcical arguments employed to rationalise
building and maintaining such weapon systems are amusingly summarised in a Yes,
Prime Minister comedy sketch from 1986, which aired soon after Margret Thatcher
first inaugurated the Trident missile system in the UK:
Sir Humphrey: With
Trident we could obliterate the whole of eastern Europe.
Hacker: I don’t
want to obliterate the whole of eastern Europe.
Sir Humphrey: But
it’s a deterrent.
Hacker: It’s a
bluff. I probably wouldn’t use it.
Sir Humphrey: Yes,
but they don’t know that you probably wouldn’t.
Hacker: They
probably do.
Sir Humphrey: Yes,
they probably know that you probably wouldn’t. But they can’t certainly know.
Hacker: They
probably certainly know that I probably wouldn’t.
Sir Humphrey: Yes,
but even though they probably certainly know that you probably wouldn’t, they
don’t certainly know that, although you probably wouldn’t, there is no
probability that you certainly would.
Redistributing vital public resources
Given that the nine nuclear-armed governments together spend
an astounding $100bn a year on nuclear forces (mainly via private
corporations), those who play a significant role in sustaining this appalling
industry are also likely to be profiting handsomely from it. In the UK, for
example, strong support for renewing Trident comes from the lucrative and
influential defence industry as well as the many banks, insurance companies,
pension funds and asset managers that invest heavily in companies producing
nuclear weapon systems. According to some calculations, 15 percent of members
in the UK’s House of Lords “have what can be deemed as 'vested interests' in
either the corporations involved in the programme or the institutions that
finance them”.
In both moral and economic terms, spending such vast amounts
of public money on producing these weapons of mass destruction is tantamount to
theft as long as austerity-driven governments profess to lack the funding
needed to safeguard basic human needs and ensure that all people have
sufficient access to essential public services. While estimates for the cost of
renewing Trident vary considerably, it is likely that the initial outlay will
be in the region of £30-40bn ($42-56bn), although this figure could rise to as
much as £167bn ($234bn) over the course of its lifetime.
Rather than wasting these vast sums on the inhumane
machinery of warfare, some of it could be used to provide emergency assistance
to desperate refugees and asylum seekers that the Tory government has
shamefully neglected, or to shore up overseas aid budgets that are being
syphoned away to cover domestic refugee-related expenses. As the Campaign for
Nuclear Disarmament (CND) calculate, if £100bn ($140bn) from the Trident budget
was spent bolstering vital public services instead, it would be enough to
“fully fund A&E services for 40 years, employ 150,000 new nurses, build 1.5
million affordable homes, build 30,000 new primary schools, or cover tuition
fees for 4 million students.”
In light of the pressing need to decommission nuclear
stockpiles and redistribute public resources in a way that truly serves the
(global) common good, the upcoming vote in the UK Parliament on renewing
Trident presents an important opportunity for campaigners and concerned
citizens to raise our voice for a just and peaceful future. Many thousands of
protesters are expected to unite on the streets of London this Saturday 27th
February in a joint demand to end the UK’s Trident program and share public
resources more equitably. As CND point out in their scrap trident campaign,
it's high time the UK government complies with its obligation under
international law to eliminate our nuclear arsenal: “By doing so we would send
a message to the world that spending for peace and development and meeting
people’s real needs is our priority, not spending on weapons of mass
destruction.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment.